Method for producing a first SOI field effect transistor with predetermined transistor properties by forming a laterally delimited layer sequence with a gate-insulating layer and a gate region on an undoped substrate, forming a spacer layer having a predetermined thickness, on at least a portion of the sidewalls of the laterally delimited layer sequence, and forming two source/drain regions having a predetermined dopant concentration profile, by introducing dopant into two surface regions of the substrate which are adjoined by the spacer layer, the layer sequence and the spacer layer forming a shading structure that prevents dopant from being introduced into a surface region of the substrate between the two source/drain regions, wherein the predetermined transistor properties of the first SOI field effect transistor are set by setting the thickness of the spacer layer and by setting the dopant concentration profile.
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1. A method for producing a first fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor with predetermined transistor properties, comprising the steps of:
forming a laterally delimited layer sequence with a gate-insulating layer and a gate region on an essentially undored body region having a thickness of less than 20 nm;
forming a spacer layer having a predetermined thickness, on at least a portion of the sidewalls of the laterally delimited layer sequence; and
forming two source/drain regions having a predetermined dopant concentration profile, by introducing dopant into two surface regions adjacent the essentially undored body region, which are adjoined by the spacer layer, the layer sequence and the spacer layer forming a shading structure that prevents dopant from being introduced into the essentially undoped body region between the two source/drain regions,
wherein the predetermined transistor properties of the first fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor are set by setting the thickness of the spacer layer and by setting the dopant concentration profile,
wherein a second fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor is formed in accordance with the method for producing the first fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor on and/or in the essentially undoped body region, the predetermined transistor properties of the second fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor being set differently from those of the first fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor, wherein the difference in the transistor properties of the first fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor and the second fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor results solely from the different thicknesses of their spacer layers.
8. A method for producing a first fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor with predetermined transistor properties comprising the steps of:
forming a laterally delimited layer sequence with a gate-insulating layer and a gate region on an essentially undored body region having a thickness of less than 20 nm;
forming a spacer layer having a predetermined thickness, on at least a portion of the sidewalls of the laterally delimited layer sequence; and
forming two source/drain regions having a predetermined dopant concentration profile, by introducing dopant into two surface regions adjacent the essentially undored body region, which are adjoined by the spacer layer, the layer sequence and the spacer layer forming a shading structure that prevents dopant from being introduced into the essentially undored body region between the two source/drain regions,
wherein the predetermined transistor properties of the first fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor are set by setting the thickness of the spacer layer and by setting the dopant concentration profile,
wherein a second fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor is formed in accordance with the method for producing the first fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor on and/or in the essentially undored body region, the predetermined transistor properties of the second fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor being set differently from those of the first fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor, wherein the predetermined transistor properties of the first fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor and of the second fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor are set such that one of the two fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistors is optimized for a low leakage current and the other for a low threshold voltage.
2. A method for producing a first fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor with predetermined transistor properties comprising the steps of:
forming a laterally delimited layer sequence with a gate-insulating layer and a gate region on an essentially undored body region having a thickness of less than 20 nm;
forming a spacer layer having a predetermined thickness, on at least a portion of the sidewalls of the laterally delimited layer sequence; and
forming two source/drain regions having a predetermined dopant concentration profile, by introducing dopant into two surface regions adjacent the essentially undored body region, which are adjoined by the spacer layer, the layer sequence and the spacer layer forming a shading structure that prevents dopant from being introduced into the essentially undored body region between the two source/drain regions,
wherein the predetermined transistor properties of the first fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor are set by setting the thickness of the spacer layer and by setting the dopant concentration profile,
wherein a second fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor is formed in accordance with the method for producing the first fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor on and/or in the essentially undored body region, the predetermined transistor properties of the second fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor being set differently from those of the first fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor, further comprising the steps of forming a third fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor in accordance with the method for producing the first fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor on and/or in the essentially undoped body region,
wherein the predetermined transistor properties of the third fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor are set to be analogous to those of the first fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor, the conduction types of the first fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor and the third fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor being complementary to one another.
7. A method for producing a first fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor with predetermined transistor properties, comprising the steps of:
forming a laterally delimited layer sequence with a gate-insulating layer and a gate region on an essentially undored body region having a thickness of less than 20 nm;
forming a spacer layer having a predetermined thickness, on at least a portion of the sidewalls of the laterally delimited layer sequence; and
forming two source/drain regions having a predetermined dopant concentration profile, by introducing dopant into two surface regions adjacent the essentially undored body region, which are adjoined by the spacer layer, the layer sequence and the spacer layer forming a shading structure that prevents dopant from being introduced into the essentially undored body region between the two source/drain regions,
wherein the predetermined transistor properties of the first fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor are set by setting the thickness of the spacer layer and by setting the dopant concentration profile,
wherein a second fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor is formed in accordance with the method for producing the first fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor on and/or in the essentially undored body region, the predetermined transistor properties of the second fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor being set differently from those of the first fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor, further comprising the steps of forming a third fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor in accordance with the method for producing the first fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor on and/or in the essentially undoped body region,
wherein the predetermined transistor properties of the third fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor are set to be analogous to those of the first fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor, the conduction types of the first fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor and the third fully depleted thin film SOI field effect transistor being complementary to one another.
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This application is a continuation of International Patent Application Serial No. PCT/DE03/00933, filed Mar. 20, 2003, which published in German on Oct. 2, 2003 as WO 03/081675.
The invention relates to a method for producing an SOI field effect transistor and to an SOI field effect transistor.
Field effect transistors are required for many applications in silicon microelectronics.
In circuit technology, it is often desirable, in modern CMOS processes, to have a plurality of different n-MOS transistors and a plurality of different p-MOS transistors having different threshold voltages (so-called multi-VT technology, where VT denotes the threshold voltage of the transistor). For specific applications, it may be necessary to have transistors with a particularly high switching speed, whereas a minimal leakage current of the transistor is sought in other applications. If the multi-VT technology is combined with the use of different supply voltages VDD of an integrated circuit (multi-VDD/VT technology), then the optimum voltage swing may be selected, depending on the switching activity of a specific transistor of an integrated circuit, in order to achieve maximum boosting of the gate voltage VDD-VT. Examples of transistors having such requirements are transistors in clock circuits with high switching activity, a low voltage swing and a low threshold voltage. In the case of a transistor in a clock circuit, the leakage current is of relatively little relevance on account of the high activity, whereas minimizing the dynamic power loss (which is a function of the square of the supply voltage VDD) is of primary interest. By contrast, in logic circuits with relatively low activity (for example less than 30%), the static power loss on account of electrical leakage currents in the switched-off state is of greater relevance, so that transistors having a higher threshold voltage are advantageous here. In order not to impair the switching speed in the active state (the switching time tD is proportional to 1/[VDD-VT]) and in order to avoid an undesirable reduction of the boosting of the gate voltage, the supply voltage VDD of the logic block is increased correspondingly.
An overview of the multi-VDD/VT circuit technology, in particular with regard to conventional CMOS technology, is found for example in Hamada, M, Ootaguro, Y, Kuroda, T (2001) “Utilizing Surplus Timing for Power Reduction”, Proceedings of the IEEE Custom Integrated Circuits Conference 2001.
A central problem of conventional integrated circuits is the increasing deterioration of the electrical properties of MOS transistors (“metal oxide semiconductor”) with increasing structural fineness, that is to say miniaturization. This is caused for example by the punch-through effect, the latch-up effect and also the parasitic capacitance between the drain/source region and the substrate, the parasitic capacitance greatly increasing more than proportionally in relation to the transistor size. The term punch-through effect refers to an undesirable punch-through of current between adjacent transistors of a transistor arrangement. The term latch-up effect designates the phenomenon wherein a transistor of the p conduction type and a transistor of the n conduction type, when the distance between them falls below a minimum distance, may form a parasitic thyristor at which a high triggering current may flow, which may effect a local destruction of an integrated semiconductor component.
The problems described are alleviated in the case of SOI technology (“silicon-on-insulator”), which uses a silicon layer on a silicon oxide layer on a silicon substrate as basic material for forming an integrated circuit. The problems described can be alleviated particularly with the use of a thin layer of silicon (e.g. having a thickness of 20 nm) on an electrically insulating silicon oxide layer.
Furthermore, using a doped substrate may give rise to the problem that technologically dictated local fluctuations in the dopant concentrations give rise to a variation of the threshold voltage in different transistors of an integrated circuit. This problem is avoided when an undoped substrate is used.
However, if a thin undoped silicon layer is used as a base layer for forming a field effect transistor, then it is not possible to alter the threshold voltage of the field effect transistor by setting the doping of the channel region. In this case, the threshold voltage of a field effect transistor may be defined by defining the work function of the material of the gate region. In this case, a separate gate material is in each case required for each type of transistor (low-power transistor or high-performance transistor, p-MOS transistor or n-MOS transistor), the threshold voltage of the respective transistor being defined by selection of the gate material.
However, the free material selection of the gate regions of different transistors of an integrated circuit may be restricted for technological reasons. Furthermore, it is complicated and therefore expensive to use different gate materials in a method for producing an integrated circuit with different transistors.
Thin-film SOI transistors (“silicon-on-insulator”) are of interest particularly in the case of a CMOS technology with dimensions below 50 nm. As discussed for example in Schiml, T, Biesemans, S, Brase, G, Burrell, L, Cowley, A, Chen, KC, Ehrenwall, A, Ehrenwall, B, Felsner, P, Gill, J, Grellner, F, Guarin, F, Han, LK, Hoinkis, M, Hsiung, E, Kaltalioglu, E, Kim, P, Knoblinger, G, Kulkarni, S, Leslie, A, Mono, T, Schafbauer, T, Schroeder, P, Schruefer, K, Spooner, T, Towler, F, Warner, D, Wang, C, Wong, R, Demm, E, Leung, P, Stetter, M, Wann, C, Chen, JK, Crabbe, E (2001) “A 0.13 μm CMOS Platform with Cu/Low-k Interconnects for System On Chip Applications” 2001 Symposium on VLSI Technology, Digest of Technical Papers, in view of the high diversity of components, a plurality of different types of transistor are required for the logic in existing processes of the 130 nm technology. In the case of three different types of transistor with different threshold voltages (high threshold voltage, medium threshold voltage, low threshold voltage) and also in the case of two different types of charge carrier (n-MOS transistor, p-MOS transistor) a total of six different materials result for the gate region. An associated thin-film SOI-CMOS process therefore requires a very high process complexity.
In present-day CMOS technologies, the threshold voltage of the field effect transistors used therein is generally set by doping the channel region. Such implantations include forming LDD regions (“Lightly Doped Drain”), carrying out a pocket doping (localized doping of the region between the source/drain regions or in the channel region, thereby reducing the sensitivity of the transistor to technologically dictated fluctuations in the length of the gate region), and also forming a retrograde well (clearly a highly doped region within the substrate between the source/drain regions). However, these implantations are subject to technologically dictated fluctuations, which result in undesirable fluctuations of the transistor properties. Furthermore, particularly in the case of fully depleted thin-film SOI transistors primarily in the case of technology nodes with feature dimensions of less than 50 nm, it is no longer possible to employ this method for setting the threshold voltage since the doping-dependent contribution to the threshold voltage VTdop is proportional to q*NA*tsi. In this case, tsi designates the thickness of the silicon layer, NA designates the dopant concentration in the channel region, and q designates the electrical elementary charge. For tsi<20 nm and NA<1016 cm−3, VTdop then has hardly any influence on the threshold voltage.
The alternative to setting the threshold voltage by means of targeted doping consists in using a plurality of different gate materials for transistors with different threshold voltages and also different conduction types. However, thin-film SOI-CMOS processes that permit the formation of MOS transistors with different threshold voltages do not exist at the present time.
One possibility for setting the transistor properties in SOI technology is the use of transistors having different lengths of the gate region, since the length of the gate region also has a crucial influence on the threshold voltage of a field effect transistor. A capability for sufficiently exact setting of the threshold voltage of transistors by setting the length of the gate region presupposes a sufficiently good resolution of a masking technique.
Therefore, as feature dimensions decrease further, with conventional masking technology, the threshold voltage of a transistor cannot be set with satisfactory accuracy by setting the length of the gate region. Moreover, the costs are very high when using masks. Furthermore, the production time of transistors increases more and more as masks become finer.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,532,175 discloses a method for adjusting a threshold voltage for a semiconductor device on an SOI substrate, in which a threshold voltage adjusting implantation is carried out.
Nuernbergk, D M et al. (1999) “Mache mögen's heiβ—Silicon on Insulator Bauelemente und ihre Besonderheiten”, in: “Mikroelektronik und Fertigung”, pages 61 to 64, discloses an overview of silicon-on-insulator components and their particular properties.
DE 198 23 212 A1 discloses a semiconductor device in which a field-shielding gate oxide layer is thicker at an edge section of a field-shielding gate electrode below a sidewall oxide layer.
DE 198 57 059 A1 discloses an SOI component and a method for producing it, in which the effect of a body at floating potential is reduced.
U.S. Pat. No. 5,273,915 discloses a method for producing bipolar junctions and MOS transistors on SOI.
The invention is based on the problem of providing a possibility for adjusting a transistor property of an SOI field effect transistor with sufficient accuracy and with a tenable outlay.
The problem is solved by means of a method for producing an SOI field effect transistor with predeterminable transistor properties and by means of an SOI field effect transistor with predeterminable transistor properties having the features in accordance with the independent patent claims.
In accordance with the method according to the invention for producing an SOI field effect transistor with predeterminable transistor properties, a laterally delimited layer sequence with a gate-insulating layer and a gate region is formed on a substrate. Furthermore, a spacer layer having a predetermined thickness is formed at least on a part of the sidewalls of the laterally delimited layer sequence. Moreover, two source/drain regions having a predetermined dopant concentration profile are formed by introducing dopant into two surface regions of the substrate which are adjoined by the spacer layer, the layer sequence and the spacer layer being set up in such a way that they form a shadowing structure for preventing dopant from being introduced into a surface region of the substrate between the two source/drain regions. The transistor properties of the SOI field effect transistor are set by setting the thickness of the spacer layer and by setting the dopant concentration profile.
The SOI field effect transistor according to the invention with predeterminable transistor properties has a laterally delimited layer sequence with a gate-insulating layer and a gate region on a substrate. Furthermore, the SOI field effect transistor has a spacer layer having a predeterminable thickness on at least a part of the sidewalls of the laterally delimited layer sequence, and also two source/drain regions in two surface regions of the substrate which are adjoined by the spacer layer, with a predeterminable dopant concentration profile. The layer sequence and the spacer layer are set up in such a way that they form a shadowing structure for preventing dopant from being introduced in a surface region of the substrate between the two source/drain regions during the production of the SOI field effect transistor. The transistor properties of the SOI field effect transistor are set by setting the thickness of the spacer layer and by setting the dopant concentration profile.
One basic idea of the invention consists in predetermining a transistor property (e.g. the threshold voltage) of an SOI field effect transistor by setting the thickness of a sidewall spacer layer and by adjusting the dopant concentration profile of the source/drain regions. The invention makes it possible to define the length of the gate region by means of a deposition method with an accuracy in the angstrom range. Problems known from the prior art (e.g. fluctuations in the dopant concentration in the substrate, complicated use of a multiplicity of different gate materials, etc.) are avoided.
The invention makes it possible to form a circuit arrangement on an SOI substrate in which it is possible to form different transistors with different transistor properties (e.g. different threshold voltages for high-performance or low-power applications) by applying a spacer layer on a laterally delimited layer sequence comprising gate region and gate-insulating layer. During a subsequent doping, the arrangement comprising laterally delimited layer sequence and spacer layer functions as a shadowing structure and prevents doping of the region between the source/drain regions. Since the length of the channel region depends directly on the thickness of the spacer layer, an exact setting of transistor properties which are correlated with these geometrical properties is made possible.
In particular it should be noted that when using a deposition method (e.g. atomic layer deposition) for forming the spacer layer, the thickness thereof can be set with an accuracy of a few angstroms, whereas the accuracy of a masking technique is of the order of magnitude of 20 nm. A significantly improved capability of setting the gate length is thereby realized according to the invention. The range of the underdiffusion of dopant into the undoped channel region can be controlled by setting the thickness of the spacer layer and the parameters during doping (type of dopant, selection and setting of the parameters of the doping method).
The deposition of a spacer is more cost-effective than the use of fine masks.
The method according to the invention avoids the use of more than two different materials (p-type, n-type) for the gate regions. For any desired thickness of a spacer layer, only one additional mask is required in order to produce a field effect transistor with a predetermined threshold voltage. When using a depleted, that is to say undoped silicon layer into which the transistor is integrated, complicated implantations in the channel region (LDD regions, pocket doping, retrograde well) are dispensable.
Preferred developments of the invention emerge from the dependent claims.
The predetermined transistor property may be the length of the channel region between the two source/drain regions, the threshold voltage, the leakage current characteristic, the maximum current or a transistor characteristic curve. According to the invention, the transistor property may be set by setting the dopant concentration profile or by setting the thickness of the spacer layer.
The thickness of the spacer layer may be set by forming the spacer layer using a chemical vapor deposition method (CVD method) or an atomic layer deposition method (ALD method). In the case of the ALD method, in particular, it is possible to precisely set a thickness of a layer to be deposited down to an accuracy of one atomic layer, that is to say down to an accuracy of a few angstroms. The high accuracy when setting the thickness of the spacer layer effects a high accuracy when setting the transistor property.
The two source/drain regions are preferably formed using an ion implantation method or a diffusion method, the dopant concentration profile being set by selecting the type, the concentration and/or the diffusion properties of the dopants.
An undoped substrate is preferably used, thereby avoiding the problems arising in conventional CMOS technologies on account of a statistically fluctuating dopant concentration. A complicated doping method is also avoided. A substrate may also be regarded as (essentially) undoped when it has a dopant concentration that is considerably lower than a dopant concentration of typically 1019 cm−3 used in the conventional CMOS technology.
The transistor properties of the SOI field effect transistor may alternatively be set by selecting the material of the gate region, the dopant concentration of the substrate and/or the dopant profile of the substrate. As a result, further parameters are available by means of which the transistor properties can be set.
In particular, the dopant profile of the substrate may be set using a pocket doping and/or retrograde well.
Furthermore, a second SOI field effect transistor may be formed in accordance with the method according to the invention for producing the SOI field effect transistor on and/or in the substrate, the transistor properties of the second SOI field effect transistor being set differently from those of the SOI field effect transistor. Such a need may arise e.g. in a semiconductor memory, since the requirements made of transistors in the logic region of a memory and in the memory region of a memory differ greatly.
The different transistor properties of the SOI field effect transistor and of the second SOI field effect transistor preferably result solely from a different thickness of the spacer layer. In other words, in particular the same gate material may be used for the transistors with different transistor properties, which results in a considerably simplified processing.
Furthermore, a third SOI field effect transistor can be formed in accordance with the method for producing the SOI field effect transistor in and/or on the substrate, the transistor properties of the third SOI field effect transistor being set analogously to those of the SOI field effect transistor. The conduction types of the SOI field effect transistor and the third SOI field effect transistor are complementary to one another. In other words, both a p-MOS transistor and an n-MOS transistor may be formed according to the invention. This takes account of the requirements of silicon microelectronics to have transistors of both conduction types on an integrated circuit.
The gate regions of the SOI field effect transistor and of the second SOI field effect transistor or of the SOI field effect transistor, of the second SOI field effect transistor and of the third SOI field effect transistor may be produced from the same material. This simplifies the process implementation and reduces the costs.
The material of the gate regions preferably has a value of the work function which is essentially equal to the arithmetic mean of the values of the work function of heavily p-doped polysilicon (p+-type polysilicon) and heavily n-doped polysilicon (n+-type polysilicon). This is referred to as a so-called “mid-gap” gate. n+-polysilicon has a work function of approximately 4.15 eV (electron volts), and p+-type polysilicon has a work function of approximately 5.27 eV. Therefore, a gate material with a band gap between the two values mentioned is suitable both for an n-type field effect transistor and for a p-type field effect transistor, for example tungsten, tantalum, titanium nitride or p+-doped germanium.
The material of the gate region furthermore preferably has a work function of between 4.45 eV and 4.95 eV.
Preferably, the transistor properties of the SOI field effect transistor and of the second SOI field effect transistor are set in such a way that one of the two SOI field effect transistors is optimized for a low leakage current and the other for a low threshold voltage. This advantageously enables a transistor in a clock circuit to be optimized for a high switching speed and therefore for a low threshold voltage. By contrast, a transistor in a memory region may be set up in a simple manner such that it permanently maintains a stored item of information and therefore has a lower leakage current.
Furthermore, in accordance with the method according to the invention, at least one SOI field effect transistor may be formed as a vertical transistor, as a transistor having at least two gate terminals (double gate transistor) or as a fin-FET (fin field effect transistor). The principle according to the invention can fundamentally be applied to all types of transistors.
Furthermore, in accordance with the method according to the invention, the second SOI field effect transistor may be protected from doping during the formation of the source/drain regions of the SOI field effect transistor by means of a protective layer. Alternatively or supplementary, the SOI field effect transistor may be protected from doping during the formation of the source/drain regions of the second SOI field effect transistor by means of a protective layer.
At least one of the SOI field effect transistors may have at least one additional spacer layer on the spacer layer. In other words, it is possible to form a plurality of spacer layers one on top of the other, the properties of the associated transistor essentially being defined by the total thickness of the plurality of spacer layers formed one on top of the other.
The method according to the invention can be applied both to lateral thin-film SOI transistors with one gate terminal and to double gate MOSFETS, planar transistors, vertical transistors or transistors of the fin-FET type.
Furthermore, the method can be applied without any problems to a technology with different thicknesses of gate-insulating layers. In this case, the diversity of components is extended by transistors with gate-insulating layers of different thicknesses (thickness tox) (so-called multi-VDD/VT/tox technology).
According to the invention, the thickness of the spacer layer is varied in the case of a predetermined source/drain doping (it is possible to predetermine the doping method, the dopant concentration, the dopant, etc.) and a fixed metallurgical length of the gate region. Assuming a source/drain doping profile with a spatial decrease ΔN/Δy in the dopant concentration N as a function of the doping location y of 5 nm per decade (logarithmic), then the effective length of the channel region, which, in the SOI field effect transistor with an undoped silicon substrate, depends on the length of the undoped silicon region, can be set by setting the length of the source/drain doping tails. In the case of a thin spacer layer, the source/drain doping tails project correspondingly far into the channel region, thereby shortening the effective channel length. This results in different electrical properties of the transistors, since the subthreshold voltage and also other short channel effects, such as the gate induced drain leakage (GIDL) that dominates the leakage current (off current), are influenced. Therefore, with the metallurgical gate length unchanged, a transistor having a thicker spacer has a higher threshold voltage and a lower leakage current (off current) and a lower maximum current (on current) than a transistor having a thinner spacer.
An essential idea of the invention consists in the simplified setting and optimization of transistor parameters by precisely defining a lateral spacer layer with respect to the gate region independently of the quality of an optical mask. The setting of the doping properties also has a crucial influence on the threshold voltage.
It should be noted that refinements of the method for forming an SOI field effect transistor with predeterminable transistor properties also apply to the SOI field effect transistor according to the invention.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention are illustrated in the figures and are explained in more detail below.
Components that are contained identically in different exemplary embodiments are provided with the same reference numerals below.
A description is given below, referring to
As shown in
As shown in the diagrams 210, 220, 230, 240, a smaller length of the channel region L can also be achieved by selecting a correspondingly smaller length of the gate region G. However, the length of the channel region L is also dependent on the thickness of the spacer layers 201, 202 and also on the spatial decrease in the dopant concentration (here by one decade every 5 nm). Therefore, a low-power field effect transistor with a desired length of the channel region and a correspondingly high value of the threshold voltage can be formed in particular by selecting the dopant concentration and also the thickness of the spacer layers 201, 202. In other words, with a spacer layer having a thickness of 25 nm, in the case of a fall in the dopant concentration of 5 nm per decade, it is possible to achieve a field effect transistor for low-power applications in which the length of the gate region corresponds to the length of the channel region.
By contrast, in the case of the transistor for high-performance applications that is shown schematically in
A description is given below, referring to
In diagram 300 from
The third and fourth curves 313, 314 depicted in the diagram 310 from
A description is given below, referring to
Transistor characteristic curves for different electrical voltages between the two source/drain regions VDS are plotted in the diagram 400 from
Output characteristic curves of the field effect transistor from
As shown by a comparison between
The dopant concentration of the silicon layer 206 is in each case 1016 cm−3, the thickness of the gate-insulating layer is 2 nm (silicon dioxide), the vertical thickness of the silicon layer 206 is 10 nm and the gate material is p+-doped germanium.
A description is given below, referring to
In order to obtain the layer sequences 520, 530 shown in
In order to obtain the layer sequences 540 and 550 shown in
In order to obtain the layer sequences 560, 570 shown in
The SOI field effect transistor in the left-hand partial region of
Furthermore, it should be noted that the first TEOS protective layer 507 and the second TEOS protective layer 513 have a thickness of approximately 10 nm in order to enable a sufficiently good insulation effect for the layer stack comprising gate-insulating layer and gate region. By contrast, the thickness “d” of the second spacer layer 551 is set in such a way that the right-hand SOI field effect transistor is formed as a low-power field effect transistor. The functionalities of the TEOS protective layers 507, 513, on the one hand, and of the spacer layers 541, 551 are fundamentally different.
A description is given below, referring to
The layer sequences 600, 610 shown in
In order to obtain the layer sequences 620, 630 shown in
In order to obtain the layer sequences 640, 650 shown in
In order to obtain the layer sequences 660, 670 shown in
Furthermore, the SOI field effect transistor 670 has a lower leakage current than the SOI field effect transistor 660.
The method described with reference to
Analogously to the production methods described with reference to
After carrying out the method steps described with reference to
An essential difference between the layer sequence 700 from
Furthermore, the production of different types of transistor (low-power transistor, high-performance transistor) using a spacer of variable thickness that has been described with reference to
Furthermore,
Schulz, Thomas, Pacha, Christian, Gottsche, Ralf, Steinhogl, Werner
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